The notion of idiosyncrasy is inextricable from the history of cultural production. In the humanities, this is attested by the twentieth-century obsession with deconstructions of the self, from the fragmented modern self to the empty self of existentialism, the constructed self of poststructuralism, the dissolved postmodern self, and the hybrid, creolized, and cosmopolitan selves of postcolonial theory. The social sciences have also investigated idiosyncrasy, from Gaston Bachelard's notion of the epistemological rupture that breaks through common sense to Edwin Hollander's idea of "idiosyncrasy credit," Pierre Bourdieu's critique of taste, and the "binding problem" in cognitive science. Yet the twentieth century was not novel: we may also cite Rabelais's neologisms, the familiarization of strangeness in Montaigne, and the grotesque according to Victor Hugo. Nor does the question of the self exhaust the problem, for we may also consider the idiosyncratic work, the idiosyncratic medium or materiality, idiosyncratic hermeneutics, and the nexus of idiosyncrasy and technology, from print cultures to digital communities.

This conference invites graduate researchers and theorists to examine idiosyncrasy in French-language culture from a wide variety of philosophical and disciplinary perspectives. We welcome contributions not only in literary and media studies but from any and all neighboring disciplines where idiosyncrasy is an important subject, including but not limited to history, philosophy, linguistics, archeology, architecture, psychology, sociology, cognitive science, and computer science. Below is list of potential themes that is of course not exhaustive:

Submit proposals containing an abstract of no more than 250 words, your name, affiliation, and contact information to cunyfrenchconference2013@gmail.com by December 15, 2012. Presentations must be 20 minutes or less, in French or English. Keynote speaker TBA.

IDIOSYNCRASIE Une conférence organisée par le département de Français du Graduate Center de la City University of New York (CUNY)